John Stephen Glasby (23 September 1928 – 5 June 2011)[1] was a British author born in
East Retford in
Nottinghamshire whose work spanned a range of popular
genres. A professional research chemist and mathematician,[2] he produced more than 300 novels and short stories during the 1950s and 1960s, most of which were published under
pen names by the
Badger Books imprint.[3]
Works
Glasby's output includes:
A small number of publications, such as the novel Project Jove, published as by John Glasby.
Approximately 25
speculative fiction novels, using pseudonyms such as "A. J. Merak" or "J. L. Powers" and the Badger
house names "John E. Muller", "Karl Zeigfreid" and "Victor La Salle". (Using the La Salle pseudonym, Glasby wrote Twilight Zone (1954), which, whilst unconnected to the American TV series of that name, preceded it in title use by five years.)
More than 30
western novels using the house name "Chuck Adams", and ten as "Tex Bradley".
34 hospital
romance novels published using the pseudonym "D.K. Jennings".
Two crime novels and six desert adventure novels, all using the pseudonym "A.J. Merak".
Six
James Bond-style spy novels published using the pseudonym "Manning K. Robertson".
An unknown number (possibly as many as a hundred) War stories set during
World War II and published using many different pseudonyms.[3]
References
^"John Glasby", www.telegraph.co.uk (obituary), 15 September 2011
^Robert M. Price, "About The Brooding City", in The Antarktos Cycle, Chaosium, 2006,
ISBN1-56882-204-9, p. 523
^
abSteve Holland, Badger Tracks: Exploring the publications of John Spencer & Co. Underworld Studios, Colchester 1997.